Confusion as Osun pupils attend school as masqueraders
The
theatre of the absurd which started playing out at the Baptist High
School, Iwo, Osun State, continued on Wednesday as some pupils came to
the school wearing costume to hide their identities like masqueraders.
Some of the pupils believed to be from
Christian families also wore choir robes, while those from Muslim
background wore hijab on their uniforms.
The school authorities, which had
envisaged that the drama that started on Monday would continue on
Wednesday, cancelled the morning assembly.
Our correspondent, who visited the
school, gathered that the cancellation of the morning assembly did not
deter pupils who still wore unconventional clothes.
Some of the pupils were said to have
come to the school in the government-approved uniform, hiding their
costumes inside their bags. They were said to have changed to various
religious regalia once they got to their classrooms.
Residents living around the school area
told our correspondent that three pupils dressed as masqueraders
stormed the school and headed for one of the classes around the break
time.
While some witnesses said the
masqueraders were allowed to go inside the school, others insisted that
they were prevented from going inside at the gate.
It was gathered that policemen and
officials of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps were deployed
in the school to prevent the breakdown of law and order following the
drama which continued for the third day.
Some officials of the NSCDC were seen at the school by our correspondent, but they declined to speak on the issue.
However, the Public Relations Officer of
the Osun State Command of the NSCDC, Mr. Ayo Olowe, confirmed to our
correspondent on the telephone that men from the command were deployed
in the school to ensure peace.
He said, “The state government has
engaged us in most of the schools and we are in Baptist High School,
Iwo, in particular, because of its peculiarity. I was told that some
people dressed as masqueraders came to the school, but were prevented
from going in.”
The Commissioner for Information, Mr.
Sunday Akere, when contacted, said the government would find a lasting
solution to the crisis.
The Chairman of the Christian
Association of Nigeria, Osun State, Rev. Elisha Ogundiya, said
Christians were not responsible for the crisis in the school.
Ogundiya, who spoke to our correspondent
on the telephone, said some of the pupils chose to dress differently to
the school because the wearing of hijab on the uniform in a school
established by Christians was provoking. He added that while Christians
would not fight the government on its educational policy, they would not
allow their heritage to be destroyed.
He said, “We are not responsible for the
crisis in the school. The students are just expressing their rights. If
Muslim children are allowed to wear hijab to school, I don’t see any
reason why Christian children cannot wear choir robes to the school or
children of those practising traditional religion dressed in their
regalia.
“We warned against this before now. Why
hijab in schools? We saw it coming and we warned the government against
it, but they refused to listen. All the pupils are free to dress the way
they like to school. It is their right.”
It will be recalled that the Ansarudeen
Society of Nigeria had in December 2013 tackled CAN for seeking to ban
pupils from wearing hijab to public schools.
Meanwhile, the Speaker of Osun State House of Assembly, Mr. Najeem Salaam, has condemned the drama going on at the school.
Salaam in a statement by his Chief Press
Secretary, Mr. Goke Butika, said, “The leadership of the school, and
the officials of Ministry of Education should prepare for an explanation
on what led to the orchestrated embarrassment of the government. The
rowdy session that has lasted for two days in the school must be
stopped. The intervention of the parliament on the school’s dress code
in conjunction with relevant stakeholders has become imperative.”
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